Camp set up in Nagada to provide Aadhar cards to villagers

Sukinda: A day after a team comprising members of State Commission for Protection of Child Rights (SCPCR), director of Woman and Children Development (WCD) department and the sub-collector visited the Nagada village following the death of 18 malnourished kids over the last three months, the State government on Sunday held a special camp at Deogaan school near the village to prepare and provide Aadhar and ration cards for the residents of the remote village.

“The special drive has been organised to prepare Aadhar cards for them as the people are uneducated and ignorant about government schemes. They cannot even tell their parents’ name,” an official said.

“We have been brought here for preparation of our Aadhaar cards. We have no ID cards. We lack proper health care and education facilities,” a resident of Nagada, who came to the camp, said.

The government team, which visited the village on Saturday, admitted lack of health care and communication facilities in the area and directed the Anganwadi workers and Integrated Child Development Services (ICDS) supervisor to camp in the village to take stock of the situation.

“There is no school and communication facilities for them. Only one school, which is being run by an NGO, is imparting education to children aged between 6 to 14. Around 53 families are living in the Nagada village. Many of the residents have no ID cards. A team of Anganwadi workers and an RMRC team have reached the spot and have collected blood samples,” Santosi Sahoo, member of SPCPR, had said.

Sub-collector Maheswar Panigrahi also admitted the precarious condition of the local residents. “The situation in the village is really grim. It has no proper communication. They have no access to health care. The benefits under various social welfare schemes have failed to reach them. It is a matter of concern for all that some children have died of malnutrition,” he had said.

“We will take measures for the welfare of the local people at the earliest with a holistic approach, ” he added.

The Women and Child Development Department has also decided to open an Anganwadi centre in the village.

Notably, as many as 18 kids allegedly died of malnutrition in the last three months in the mining dominated area.

Nagada is situated on a hilltop in a dense forest under mineral-rich Sukinda block. Located about 30 km from Sukinda Chromite valley and more than 50 km from Kalinga Nagar Industrial complex, there is virtually no road to the village.

Even for basic necessities, the villagers have to trek more than 15 km through a dense forest to reach a motorable road, sources said.